The most surprising discoveries from our universe - with Chris Lintott

Ғылым және технология

Did you know that many profound discoveries about our universe have been made accidentally? Find out more with Chris Lintott.
Buy Chris' book 'Our Accidental Universe: Stories of Discovery from Asteroids to Aliens' here: geni.us/IEBBkkY
Watch the Q&A here: • Q&A: The most surprisi...
Join BBC Sky at Night presenter and Gresham Professor of Astronomy Chris Lintott as he unravels tales of peculiar accidents, remarkable individuals, and the occasional human oversight that have collectively shaped some of the most pivotal celestial revelations.
This lecture was recorded at the Ri on 21 March 2024.
00:00 Intro - our accidental universe
4:08 The incredible discovery made on Saturn’s moon Enceladus
13:27 Searching for life across the cosmos
19:16 Radio signals from across the universe?
29:06 Detecting possible structures around planets
39:51 Planetary ingestion - planets eating stars
45:11 Why conditions on Venus are so different from Earth
50:40 How NASA fixed the Hubble telescope in space
54:38 What Hubble discovered by accident
When capturing the first glimpses of the earliest galaxies, the Hubble Space Telescope was focused on a region of space presumed to be vacant. However, the image it produced was anything but - the iconic Hubble Ultra-Deep Field image revealed at least 10,000 galaxies.
Another astonishingly accidental discovery was the hidden story of Enceladus, one of Saturn’s myriad moons. Very little was known about Enceladus until NASA’s Cassini probe revealed its environment in more detail, including its capabilities as a potential haven for life.
The narrative continues with the revelation of pulsars, the remnants of colossal stars long extinguished. They were not uncovered through meticulous observation but rather as hidden gems within the unassuming data, disguised as background noise in the measurements of faint celestial radio signals.
As new observatories and state-of-the-art technology continue to develop, Chris calls for scientists to keep an open mind as the potential for discovery grows, allowing us to unravel the mysteries of the universe.
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Christopher John Lintott is a British astrophysicist, author and broadcaster. He is a Professor of Astrophysics in the Department of Physics at the University of Oxford, and since 2023 is the Gresham Professor of Astronomy at Gresham College, London. Lintott is involved in a number of popular science projects aimed at bringing astronomy to a wider audience and is also the primary presenter of the BBC television series The Sky at Night.
----
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Пікірлер: 162

  • @theextragalactic1
    @theextragalactic123 күн бұрын

    I was fortunate to have been one of the attendees - this was a wonderful event!

  • @bluesque9687

    @bluesque9687

    20 күн бұрын

    Lucky you! And congrats too!

  • @martinlaird9712

    @martinlaird9712

    20 күн бұрын

    Go fry a chicken o darn it , I'm cloaked in gravy balls for a couple hours but a lot more with me now and I have to deal of to listed above all that we will be a little concerned to ensure we are going ahead to make sure my work got finished by end up in a couple weeks and a little bit of the app to get the chance of a joke or not so confident in that now that you have a better understanding of the process and how to make this change but I will request that myself to say it last week because it still has me angry and I had been told by my manager that this information would be forwarded on to me for the past year was the best I could for the company after certain people had retired but I was wondering what the best I can see you in this regard as I'm a fan

  • @Nonono-qs7im

    @Nonono-qs7im

    20 күн бұрын

    That is so cool, and I'm jealous in the most spiritual, mental and psychological way, plus I was personally enriched by their free to learn class on chemistry, so I'm happy for you in the most altruistic way simultaneously grateful for the Institutes philanthropic endeavors!

  • @scignosis

    @scignosis

    18 күн бұрын

    ​@@martinlaird9712ok gptv1

  • @tkonan

    @tkonan

    12 күн бұрын

    It's unfortunate that the audio in this recording is so distorted. Is that something that was noticeable at the lecture?

  • @Rhimeson
    @Rhimeson12 күн бұрын

    I enjoy Chris Lintott's communication style; interesting, humorous and laid back. Good lecture. Thanks :)

  • @talkingmudcrab718

    @talkingmudcrab718

    4 күн бұрын

    Agreed. He's definitely a gifted scientific public speaker.

  • @alandyer910
    @alandyer910Күн бұрын

    Superb talk by one of the great science communicators of our time. Thank you for making the talk available for all to watch and enjoy.

  • @JenniferNg0529
    @JenniferNg052920 күн бұрын

    I love Chris Lintott! I have been watching “The Sky at Night” for years 😍

  • @gerryjamesedwards1227

    @gerryjamesedwards1227

    20 күн бұрын

    It's one of my earliest TV memories, watching Patrick Moore in black and white on The Sky at Night! Chris was Sir Patrick's hand-picked successor.

  • @JSB2500

    @JSB2500

    20 күн бұрын

    ​@@gerryjamesedwards1227Mine too! 🙂

  • @Mkbshg8

    @Mkbshg8

    19 күн бұрын

    Same here, absolutely loved that show.

  • @nomadpurple6154

    @nomadpurple6154

    13 күн бұрын

    Do you do any of the space projects on Zooniverse? there's a good community of people of all skill levels there. I have a current potential giant planet orbiting a low-mass star and supernova candidates and I've never owned a telescope.

  • @SuperBlinding

    @SuperBlinding

    9 күн бұрын

    And the Sky has been watching you since you were born (wink) !

  • @andycordy5190
    @andycordy519020 күн бұрын

    How wonderful that the universe very occasionally creates by a series of accidents, a gifted science communicator able to deliver these staggering concepts on mainstream media and in RI talks. Thank you

  • @amirmn7
    @amirmn74 күн бұрын

    Royal Institution is the gift keeps giving to humanity. I am amazed and I awe of these magnificent talks. Thank you!

  • @leddielive
    @leddielive14 күн бұрын

    What an enthralling lecture, I was thoroughly captivated for the entirety of the hour, what a fascinating universe we all live in. 😀

  • @user-nn8wz6ir2m
    @user-nn8wz6ir2m20 күн бұрын

    i have been following this channel from 2019 all guests enthusiasm is astounding

  • @chunky7800
    @chunky780020 күн бұрын

    Such an inspiration! The style may still be there but lucid clarity is seldom heard.

  • @JoyoSnooze
    @JoyoSnooze17 күн бұрын

    A wonderfully easy and thoroughly engaging talk to listen to, even for those of us who may already be familiar with the examples shown here. I am consistently proud of the Royal Institution for showcasing scientific communication to the world.

  • @elenalosseva4912
    @elenalosseva491219 сағат бұрын

    Amazing lecture! Thank you for sharing it

  • @deborjhablackwell6162
    @deborjhablackwell61624 күн бұрын

    Oh my goodness! This was so beautifully explained that I am moved to tears. Seriously. It reminds me to stand in awe of my own existence.

  • @existdissolve
    @existdissolve20 күн бұрын

    This was spectacular…thank you

  • @isabellawinslow5803
    @isabellawinslow580320 күн бұрын

    Stellar talk!

  • @scottbrower9052

    @scottbrower9052

    5 күн бұрын

    Punny 😏

  • @DanielVerberne
    @DanielVerberne5 күн бұрын

    16:40 - pondering 'answers' to the Fermi Paradox is one of my favourite intellectual activities. It touches upon such deep questions....how we view ourselves, how we view humanity and our trajectory as a species.... what we suspect is the nature of the cosmos in relation to fostering life ... whether one thinks that consciousness, that strange and mysterious seeming trick of advanced life, whether THAT is in some way central to the cosmos .... what we think of time, etc, etc. The Fermi Paradox is a fun question to engage with.

  • @smeeself
    @smeeself19 күн бұрын

    Lovely talk. Thank you. 👍

  • @Jean-yn6ef
    @Jean-yn6ef5 күн бұрын

    💚🏜️💚 lovely presentation

  • @markosullivan6444
    @markosullivan644420 күн бұрын

    I've just bought the book, looking forward to reading it.

  • @AndOnly99
    @AndOnly992 күн бұрын

    Thank you

  • @SpiralDiving
    @SpiralDiving13 күн бұрын

    The evening star on earth is venus, not jupiter. The cassini probe was launched by a titan rocket, not the space shuttle.

  • @Speedy636Germany
    @Speedy636Germany6 күн бұрын

    Engaging talk, would love to see more! Thx for the upload!

  • @DanielVerberne
    @DanielVerberne5 күн бұрын

    And the award for most pleasing speaking diction goes to .... Chris Lintott! A very engaging speaker.

  • @eonasjohn
    @eonasjohn18 күн бұрын

    Very grateful.

  • @Fomites
    @Fomites6 күн бұрын

    What a great talk!

  • @beerasaurus
    @beerasaurus20 күн бұрын

    The universe, what a concept

  • @dennisrexgreen1190
    @dennisrexgreen119019 күн бұрын

    Synchronicity and human brilliance is amazing. Wonderful talk!

  • @jesmarina
    @jesmarina13 күн бұрын

    Great talk. Almost stream-of-consciousness-like. Super.

  • @petersheppard1979
    @petersheppard197918 күн бұрын

    Excellent !!! 🙂

  • @Billybobble1
    @Billybobble117 күн бұрын

    I read the answer to the Fermi paradox just recently from a humble KZread comment and I wish I could remember the name of the person that presented the solution. There is no Fermi paradox, life is out there, but the reason we don't know about them is because like us, they simply cannot get government funding to progress their civilisation.

  • @RILEYLEIFSON_UTAH

    @RILEYLEIFSON_UTAH

    16 күн бұрын

    Ummm....Yeahh....No. Just...No. You're honestly trying to say that there's all these advanced lifeforms just like us out there... but tragically, they just can't procure funding from their governments to come find us??🤔🤦🏼‍♂️

  • @Billybobble1

    @Billybobble1

    15 күн бұрын

    Ummm it's called 'humour', maybe an alien concept for you? 😆

  • @user-ou7pj1rd5m
    @user-ou7pj1rd5m4 күн бұрын

    Thank you enjoyed your presentation 🐺

  • @rtl7021
    @rtl702112 күн бұрын

    Maravilha!!

  • @sarcasmo57
    @sarcasmo5714 күн бұрын

    I wish we could fly around and visit these places.

  • @Bailey-zn2je

    @Bailey-zn2je

    11 күн бұрын

    That will never happen unfortunately.

  • @braddofner6407

    @braddofner6407

    10 күн бұрын

    Soon, they are working on that tech I'm sure. We just don't know about it yet. Look what we have done in just the last 15 years! Won't happen in my lifetime, but we will get there. Maybe even in a tourist capacity!

  • @frogz
    @frogz20 күн бұрын

    the RI likes repeating lecture topics, i've seen this topic a dozen times or more! but, it is always interesting none the less

  • @timhannah4
    @timhannah411 күн бұрын

    Brilliant, Many Thanks Chris Loved it!

  • @mcknottee
    @mcknottee14 күн бұрын

    Excellent lecture. 🙂

  • @EmilyMaynard-mj2sg
    @EmilyMaynard-mj2sg19 күн бұрын

    I LOVE DR. T!! I was an astrophysics major at LSU for 2 years and took her for a few classes!

  • @koori3085
    @koori30859 күн бұрын

    Brilliant delivery of very interesting thoughts, wonderful production!

  • @patrickweston4131
    @patrickweston41317 күн бұрын

    That was great. Thank you.

  • @mikaelbiilmann6826
    @mikaelbiilmann68269 күн бұрын

    This is very interesting! Fun stuff too!

  • @shelbyroderfeld5943
    @shelbyroderfeld594313 күн бұрын

    Great presentation! 🖖

  • @adrianaspalinky1986
    @adrianaspalinky198619 күн бұрын

    I was there, but just watched through again 😁👍

  • @jamesgrover2005
    @jamesgrover200520 күн бұрын

    My personal favorite is, each time a civilisation gets noisy they have been eaten.. 🤫

  • @LEDewey_MD
    @LEDewey_MD3 күн бұрын

    Our existence is a product of "chance contingencies of existence"

  • @Matt-db1kq
    @Matt-db1kq17 күн бұрын

    Always keep RS

  • @1000YearsofPeaceplan
    @1000YearsofPeaceplan20 күн бұрын

    Us as an accident makes life rare in the universe, life with purpose makes it abundant Our seasons show the narrow band that we as life can exist in

  • @Safetytrousers

    @Safetytrousers

    18 күн бұрын

    Is that lost in translation?

  • @1000YearsofPeaceplan

    @1000YearsofPeaceplan

    18 күн бұрын

    @@Safetytrousers Thanks, fixed

  • @DanielVerberne
    @DanielVerberne5 күн бұрын

    Wouldn't it be amazing to have a 'POV' view of an ultra-sturdy melting-swimming probe as it descended through the icy layer of a moon and into its ultra-deep ocean. It would be so fascinating ... would we see anything macroscopic life? Would ANYTHING live? It's so hard to imagine vast amounts of water and NOT imagine life, but that's due to our Earth-centric view where every where we find liquid water, we find life. I'd LOVE to have these outer moons explored ....

  • @danielash1704
    @danielash17043 күн бұрын

    I think they have a lot of Crystals which could be used in higher frequency settings and the lowers ones as well that becomes a Tallow flow without destruction of itself in a way we can find out how much they can transmit and resonates with other ones atoms heat up or freeze in place for a long term relationship of resonance. Imagine that all vibrations are stronger or weaker in certain areas and the floating density is measured as a different environment than the same planet or moons in each state of gravity recordings in crystal caverns or surface space that was in a very distant way

  • @adrianaspalinky1986
    @adrianaspalinky198619 күн бұрын

    Yes! I'm in the video!!! I will be, a young white star, forming a eye in the HorseHead nebula

  • @warpeace8891
    @warpeace889114 күн бұрын

    There is no paradox in the search for life. The only paradox's are those that are invented. If we search with an open mind then we will find whatever we encounter.

  • @fritnat
    @fritnat14 күн бұрын

    40.02 _So this is a story about planets eating stars._ Quite a mouthfull, beats eating hot peppers!

  • @dcmurray6466
    @dcmurray64665 күн бұрын

    11:57 - "an underwater ocean" - now that's something I have never heard before! Other than that - a brilliant lecture. (But my niggle does show that I was paying attention!)

  • @niteshsapkota335
    @niteshsapkota3354 күн бұрын

    Space telescopes have superpower, they can see the whole universe unfold on time even when they stare at the emptiest part of our universe

  • @TomoyoTatar
    @TomoyoTatar20 күн бұрын

    National Park hypothesis seems my type of hypothesis! 😂❤

  • @calmeilles
    @calmeilles19 күн бұрын

    I love the story behind the The Hubble Deep Field image and I have the Hubble _Ultra_ Deep Field taken over 11.3 days total exposure between September 2003 and January 2004 as the background for my computer monitors. I do wonder what the - carefully unnamed - _Eminent Astronomers_ who said there'd be nothing there thought on first seeing the images. 🤣

  • @Safetytrousers

    @Safetytrousers

    18 күн бұрын

    They were probably pleasently surprised. They knew they would have just been giving their best guess.

  • @adrianaspalinky1986
    @adrianaspalinky198619 күн бұрын

    Our Solar system is very kooky. I feel that some being created our solar system to teach us, "don't make your planet like Venus, don't make your planet like Mars, don't m etc."

  • @Nonono-qs7im
    @Nonono-qs7im20 күн бұрын

    Honestly, it is precisely counterintuitive to focus the Hubble telescope at nothing in order to discover what is actually there and 100% new but a perfect example of thinking outside the box...like the double slit experiment changed by the observer which honestly is counterintuitive until you consider the observer needs to convert and capture light for the observers ability to report on what they observed!

  • @Just.A.T-Rex

    @Just.A.T-Rex

    20 күн бұрын

    Sounds like you misunderstand what exactly is mean by “observer” has nothing to do with a conscious being

  • @abcdefg5185
    @abcdefg51855 күн бұрын

    Im soooo sick of the media printing headlines that arent true or suggests ideas that havent been substantiated yet. How are they allowed to get away with it ????

  • @kerrysullivan9907
    @kerrysullivan990720 күн бұрын

    I thought HST’s “glasses” were called COSTAR for Corrective Optics Space Telescope Axial Replacement.

  • @rflameng
    @rflameng19 күн бұрын

    One of the problems of our 'understanding' of astronomy is that we use earthbound measures. 4.5 billion years is only 'a long time' is you're a human and use a time scale that is designed by and for humans. If you were simply to recalculate everything using an equivalent Neptune-based set of measurements where 1 year is 164.8 earth years long, the whole situation would look completely different.

  • @Safetytrousers

    @Safetytrousers

    18 күн бұрын

    It's not a problem of understanding. You and I have an idea of what 4.5 billion years is because we know what our Earth year feels like. And we are numerate.

  • @Nonono-qs7im
    @Nonono-qs7im20 күн бұрын

    You know, even the info concerning penguin poo is a valuable serendipitous knowledge that plausibly lends itself to alien detection especially when one considers that everything alive with exception to the human face mites, does in fact poo!

  • @lukewarmchilipepper21.12
    @lukewarmchilipepper21.1212 күн бұрын

    Recently I have been doing a lot of thinking about the "accidental" universe idea. I do agree that our discoveries occur in that fashion but it seems as though the universe unfolds in increasing levels of complexity. It appears as though it is centered around the acquisition and transmission of information. Firstly, the organization of particles into atoms then into matter, allowing gravity to take center stage. Gravity is the mechanism with which the universe takes its form and function. Stars, planets, galaxies and cosmic web come to be. When certain conditions are met, higher levels of universal complexity occur on these planets; life and consciousness. Our discovery of AI seems to be a further level of complexity. AI is a tool that will allow us to gain a level of knowledge we may not have been able to obtain on our own. Maybe not, just my two pennies.

  • @Nonono-qs7im
    @Nonono-qs7im20 күн бұрын

    Giant impact of large bodies or variable size bodies of significant sizes could indeed modify a regular dipping event into a rather odd wtf type scenario! It's only a theory but these events did and have occurred multiple times within our own solar system, along with planetary ejection, etc, thus these somewhat irregular events can or could be attributed to spacial body events that we are currently aware of within our own galactic/solar neighborhood, history!

  • @asicdathens
    @asicdathens15 күн бұрын

    Cassini / Huygens was launched on top of a Titan IV B / Centaur rocket and not from the Space Shuttle. Hubble was kind of launched from the Space Shuttle.

  • @bipolarminddroppings
    @bipolarminddroppings15 күн бұрын

    I cant remember who said it originally, but once I heard it, it became my goto way of explaining how science usually works: Scientific discoveries are rarely made with a cry of "Eureka!" But most often with a mutter of "Hmm, that's interesting..." The discovery of Uranus being one such example, someone looked at the orbit of Saturn, realised there was an anomaly and said "That’s interesting..." and that lead to the discovery of a new planet.

  • @5Andysalive
    @5Andysalive12 күн бұрын

    Little correction: Cassini wasn't launched from the Space Shuttle (anymore). It was launched (fittiingly) on a Titan rocket. The concept of launching probes and satellites with the Shuttle died with Challenger. Sadly not before seriously crippling Galileo. Doing a "mundane" transport job that could be done with a much, MUCH cheaper rocket, saved costs and pointless risk for astronauts.

  • @mpmpm

    @mpmpm

    12 күн бұрын

    "...pointless risk for astronauts": What astronauts do, is not pointless. They practice science. Which give scientific results.

  • @5Andysalive

    @5Andysalive

    12 күн бұрын

    ​@@mpmpm read and understand.... Launching a satellite or probe with he Space Shuttle is a pointless risk for astronauts, because it is not science! It's a transport job. And doing it with the Shuttle has absolutely NO benefits over doing it with a rocket. So putting multiple people at risk for that makes no sense. Hence "pointless". And as i said it was also insanely expensive compared to a rocket. So you have high costs, risking a whole crew for a needlessly complicated launch job, for no benefit. It was stupid and after challenger the Shuttle was reserved for actual science work, deemed worth the risk. The Shuttle is worth reading (or watching) up about. It was the result of budget cuts ,politics and design by many committees, making it much less than it could have been. Why Nasa missions and even commercial satellites were launched on it was also political. It's history is complicated. And interesting. And to explain the Galileo thing (years before Cassini) : it was supposed to launch on a Shuttle. But after Challenger, the Shuttle was grounded for 2 years and Galileo put in storage. It is likely that the greasing of various bearings suffered from that and that's why Galileos big main antenna never unfolded. Limiting it to a few low bandwidth engineering antenna to send data back. Despite some engineering magic by Nasa it limited Galleos bandwidth for the entire mission. Lessons for Cassini, directly from Galileo: Fixed main antenna, no fancy unfolding business, and DON'T launch it on the Shuttle. Making Cassini a unqualified success.

  • @Bjowolf2
    @Bjowolf211 күн бұрын

    Won't Jupiter on average deflect just as many comets towards "us", as it shield us from? - comets that would never have headed our way, if Jupiter hadn't influenced their trajectories.

  • @rpoorbaugh
    @rpoorbaugh20 күн бұрын

    13:58

  • @brookestephen
    @brookestephen19 күн бұрын

    is this how Saturn's rings survive - through near constant contributions from the ice blowing off Enceladus?

  • @Safetytrousers

    @Safetytrousers

    18 күн бұрын

    Why and how would a watery ring make rings made of solid material more stable?

  • @brookestephen

    @brookestephen

    18 күн бұрын

    @@Safetytrousers NASA found the ring material showering into the surface clouds of Saturn... so *STABILITY* would require a source of *NEW* ice material.

  • @Safetytrousers

    @Safetytrousers

    18 күн бұрын

    @@brookestephen Infall of rings is proposed to be due to electrically charged water ice being drawn down magnetic lines. How would an inner ring of ice be preventing the other rings from all scrunching together against it?

  • @DaftZzzzz
    @DaftZzzzz16 күн бұрын

    The sound quality seems to get worse and worse at the royal institute, this is on par with a laptop mic, they really need to fix this.

  • @tkonan

    @tkonan

    12 күн бұрын

    The microphone is saturating. Either turn down the sensitivity or bend it away from the mouth some. It's disappointing... you'd want to think of the Ri as being world-class, but they fail to adequately soundcheck.

  • @frankbarnwell____
    @frankbarnwell____17 күн бұрын

    If or when several of "our" planets align; Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, etc... what would the signal appear like at 10k light years? Wt flux? Maybe a bunch of rocks still making their way together under gravity, orbiting the star.

  • @miketkong2
    @miketkong26 күн бұрын

    So is the universe an accident or not?

  • @TheDavidlloydjones
    @TheDavidlloydjones4 күн бұрын

    at 54:25, "sharpness" is singular, "galaxies" is plural, but "sharpness of galaxies" is still singular. Sharpness is, not are, what you were trying to get. If you can't identify your subject, you don't know what you're talking about, do you?

  • @gizabitadat1499
    @gizabitadat149915 күн бұрын

    WE HAVE ONLY BEGUN TO UNDERSTAND OUR NECK OF THE WOODS WE WILL SOON LEARN HOW DANGEROUS IT REALLY IS EARTH ?

  • @bryandraughn9830
    @bryandraughn983020 күн бұрын

    It might be considered funny when there's a 1000 to 1 ratio of click bait vs. genuine science on certain social media platforms, but it's less funny when we take into consideration that there are curious people who are just trying to learn and they have to deal with it. It's disgusting to take advantage of these people for profit.

  • @DanielVerberne
    @DanielVerberne5 күн бұрын

    18:40 - I disagree that intelligence took a long time to form on Earth. COMPLEX life took a long time to form. For most of Earth's history, the only form of life was microbial, single-celled or at least far from the complex macroscopic creatures we tend to call 'animals'. I'd argue intelligence may yet exist on it's own, separate 'rung' of a ladder, but that MOSTLY, the challenge seems to have been life advancing beyond the simple and microbial.

  • @TommyTCGT
    @TommyTCGT14 күн бұрын

    Note thtat Swiss billy meier has had since 1942 over 800 recorded face to face chats with human ets. They claim common ancestry with many here.. so have observed and helped us along for millennia. They get here instantly over 500 light yera distance from beyond Star Taygeta in the Taurus Const., given us 20K pages of data, on the sire, and told us we are nearly all et bere today.

  • @RickB50SS
    @RickB50SS15 сағат бұрын

    Fab information and exchange. Tx kapai. Remember the Inuit people and many species thrive beneath water ice right here on earth Papatuanuku.Perhaps life as we know it was considered the short straw by many and hence religions more easily developed and were used to manipulate masses by the self appointed learned? monks, lawyers, priests, accountants ect

  • @lu-uf8zj
    @lu-uf8zj12 күн бұрын

    Venus doesn't have a large moon to help skim off excess greenhouse gasses.

  • @davebruneau6068
    @davebruneau60686 күн бұрын

    "Stories of Discovery from Asteroids to Aliens" Humans have "discovered" Aliens? TWO WEEKS AGO?

  • @jimjackson4256
    @jimjackson425614 күн бұрын

    Any life form living in an ocean won’t be doing any radio astronomy.

  • @ashnur
    @ashnur12 күн бұрын

    "Did you know that many profound discoveries about our universe have been made accidentally?" Yes, and no. Engineers and scientists worked hard on a lot of these, and some of the so called discoveries are mistakes anyway. But the fact that cosmologists have to rewrite everything from scratch every time a new kind of observatory pops up should tell us something.

  • @justaguy4real
    @justaguy4real3 күн бұрын

    14:16 ya and decades ago scientists were certain our solar system was a fluke and there were only stars out there

  • @rursus8354
    @rursus83544 күн бұрын

    This Fermi Paradox stuff: don't be emotional! Of course the aliens won't visit us, because were mere weepy emotional apes, trying to be something like "civilized". Pure science explains to us that being smart is evolutionary very expensive, and then one can extrapolate from there.

  • @MrXeCute
    @MrXeCute20 күн бұрын

    What Mars Rover? "February 14, 1990: the Pale Blue Dot The Voyager 1 spacecraft, out near Saturn, took this iconic image of Earth 33 years ago. It turned out to be one of the most memorable images ever taken from space. Astronomer Carl Sagan wrote in his 1994 book Pale Blue Dot: Look again at that dot."

  • @Nonono-qs7im
    @Nonono-qs7im20 күн бұрын

    I neglected to mention just how valuable the herbivorous dinosaurs poo has contributed to our chances of locating, utilizing and production of massive crop cultivation that feeds us all, which is an odd but wonderful aspect to poo!

  • @Just.A.T-Rex

    @Just.A.T-Rex

    20 күн бұрын

    Explain please

  • @dadsonworldwide3238
    @dadsonworldwide323820 күн бұрын

    Great lecture 👌 👏 Can we not raise a new feild & dicipline of Objectivism? It does seem to be happening as Most of those who study physics appear to spend more & more efforts working on subjective properties outside of their own self defined domains. This should be from a blank slate perspective that isn't informed or held by the standard accommodations. We have represented the old world whatsboutism really well even spent the most money in human history to try and prove them without luck . We've used the inventions of our most essentric fundamentalistic ancestors to do so even though most of them would ask why we abandoned their most fruitfully eccentric ideas and inspirations ? Take our most taught foundational ordering and categorizing skills it looks OK on paper ( like a football draft on paper it's a playoff roster) but in excersize the slightest variations can be argued a completely different species of losers. Plausible deniabilty loopholes embedded within have even experts talking past one another to the point we have no idenfiers to hold anyone accountable. No means to build concensus on defining what life is, what is a tribe, a nation a people place 0r thing.. If you went to school in uk or America 40+ years ago you was taught the most single origin given enough time & chances in universe that one random primordial soup on earth where space is a bottleneck. You would get in trouble asking where is the code of life measure & teachers was instructed to give all the arguments of Darwin and Lyle in opposition to all things phenotypical or epigenetics . Modern explanatory power of dna would get you blackballed. We seem OK with all these old eccentric alien hunters and reaching for the most Sci fi movies narratives if it stays within certain extremes. As if this embedded plausible deniabilty wasn't bad enough , We seem to oppose nature dictating it's own 1st position orientation and direction and telling us how to properly order & speak of it . We want to project our quality into it and make it say what we want to hear

  • @ianthomas7075
    @ianthomas707510 күн бұрын

    Why would ANYONE think that people who have convinced themselves that something that can't be seen, touched or interacted with [dark matter] is real have ANY IDEA of what they're doing?

  • @keithmurf426
    @keithmurf42620 күн бұрын

    We can’t even land on the moon after 50 years yet we can do the most complex things you can imagine with other things lol.

  • @TaimazHavadar
    @TaimazHavadar20 күн бұрын

    اونها زمینها ی ما رو میسازند (بینهایت سیاره و زمین )ولی در زمانهای مختلف هستند اون زمین ها که پشت سر هم جای خود را عوض میکنند در مرکز یا کانونها (که جای اصلی کره زمین هستش) و زمان ودر واقع فهم گذر زمان رو روی زمین برای ما به وجود می آورند که به سرعت نور هم طبق فیلم قبلی مرتبط میشه 🙏🙏 اینطوری جلو نیاید لطفا قوی و قدرتمندتر از کل تاریخ باید ادعا کنید که دارید کل اسرار فیزیک و جهان رو در طول عمر بشر میفهمید و شما ها بزرگترین فیزیکدانهای کل تاریخ بشریت هستید و برای بقیه رشته ها هم همینطور ✋️👍🙏💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💜💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚💚🏅🎖🏆🥇

  • @jackbuff_I
    @jackbuff_I9 күн бұрын

    I love to hear people say "we don't see UFOs" .. specifically people that never look. UFOs and alien craft have been admitted to having been recovered by US forces. All this "harharhar..aliens are dumb ok" attitude is so old.

  • @TaimazHavadar
    @TaimazHavadar20 күн бұрын

    شهاب سنگ ها همان سیارک های مشتری هستند که به دلیل جو زمین اون بارش های شهابی رو میبینید ولی امسال چند تاشون دارند به سمت زمین می آیند متاسفانه و باید بررسی کنید اگر در میدان دید تلسکوپ ها باشند میتوان فهمید و در غیر اینصورت نمیتوان من هم دارم بررسی میکنم خودم همین

  • @pierregrondin4273
    @pierregrondin427320 күн бұрын

    19:30 Maybe we don't hear anyone because we don't yet know how to to open a wormhole channel 😂 We now know everything we see is electric, atomes, molecules, light, name it and yet, not that long ago we knew none of it. What else we don't know of...

  • @Safetytrousers

    @Safetytrousers

    18 күн бұрын

    We very much know there are things we don't know, and things we don't know to know we don't know.

  • @pierregrondin4273

    @pierregrondin4273

    18 күн бұрын

    @@Safetytrousers which means we should be opened for ideas, perhaps even crazy-soundings ones.

  • @Safetytrousers

    @Safetytrousers

    18 күн бұрын

    @@pierregrondin4273 One explanation of the dimming star could be a gaseous giant green space elephant. But there are reasons such an idea should be dismissed although absolute proof is not possible.

  • @rogerjohnson2562
    @rogerjohnson25625 күн бұрын

    He sure likes his own jokes...

  • @keithmurf426
    @keithmurf42620 күн бұрын

    Did they discover gas on Uranus again? 😴

  • @TaimazHavadar
    @TaimazHavadar20 күн бұрын

    ودر نهایت اکثر قمر های مشتری و بقیه سیارات گازی (‌قفل شده ها با سیارات مخصوصا ) بخش های مختلف و لایه های مختلف کره زمین هستند و در بخش پوسته و مخصوصا بالای پوسته و سطح زمین 😎🙏🙏💜💜💜💜💜🤫 بیابانها و کوه ها و رودها و بقیه را تشکیل میدهند قمر اروپا چه خبر ؟؟😄

  • @Ryan-mq2mi
    @Ryan-mq2mi8 күн бұрын

    Shouldn’t you guys be promoting some radical left-wing ideology or something? It’s bizarre to see you not doing that. Makes you wonder.

  • @fractalnomics
    @fractalnomics19 күн бұрын

    Wonderful. BBC woke free science.

  • @TaimazHavadar
    @TaimazHavadar20 күн бұрын

    یه آدم فضایی روی زمین هست ولی بقیه بیرون منظومه اند برادر ،و شما نمیبیشون 👽👻👻👻 زیاد مغرور نباشید و کشفیات رو انجام بدید

  • @JohnWilmerding
    @JohnWilmerding15 күн бұрын

    These are unjustified conclusions.

  • @LodvarDude

    @LodvarDude

    14 күн бұрын

    Really. Please elaborate. I’d like a good laugh.

  • @pi5549
    @pi55496 күн бұрын

    This man has some infuriating mannerisms.

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